Ear Piercing: Only for Women?

Wa `alaykum as-salamu wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh. In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful. All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His Messenger. Dear brother, thank you for your question and your eagerness to be more knowledgeable about Islam. It should be known that our bodies are a trust from Allah Almighty that we are ordained to take much care of. We are only allowed to interfere with them for allowed medical reasons, etc. Any other interference with our bodies is akin to altering Allah’s creation which is forbidden in Islam. In&hellip;

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All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His Messenger.

Dear brother, thank you for your question and your eagerness to be more knowledgeable about Islam.

It should be known that our bodies are a trust from Allah Almighty that we are ordained to take much care of. We are only allowed to interfere with them for allowed medical reasons, etc. Any other interference with our bodies is akin to altering Allah’s creation which is forbidden in Islam.

In his response to your question, Sheikh Ahmad Kutty, a senior lecturer and an Islamic scholar at the Islamic Institute of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, states:

According to the teachings of Islam, our body, including all of our physical faculties, is a trust from God in our hands which we are required to protect and preserve according to the best of our ability. Consequently, we are not allowed to alter or tamper with them unnecessarily; we are only permitted to interfere with them in order to correct a natural deformity or repair or remedy an ailment. Any other form of interference or tampering with our body is akin to altering Allah’s creation which has been condemned in the Qur’an.

We read in the Qur’an that Satan, the accursed one, has pledged to Allah that he will be tirelessly working to lead humans unto ways of perdition and self-destruction: “And I will surely lead them astray, and arouse desires in them, and command them and they will cut the cattle’s ears, and I will surely command them and they will change Allah’s creation. Whoever chooses the Devil for a friend instead of Allah is assuredly a loser, and his loss is manifest.” (An-Nisaa’ 4:119)

While reflecting on the above verse, we must also read the following statements of Allah in the Qur’an: “There is no altering Allah’s creation.” (Ar-Rum 30:30); “And do not cast yourselves into destruction by your own hands.” (Al-Baqarah 2:195)

In light of the above, body piercing, tattooing, branding, etc. all fall in the category of unnecessary interference, alteration and mutilation of Allah’s creation. Therefore, no Muslim, who is conscious of his religion, should ever contemplate such activities. Neither are such procedures harmless physical refinements as they are often imagined to be.

Rather, the truth is that these procedures have often been associated with numerous health hazards. For sensitive parts of body such as tongues, lips, eyelids, etc., are more prone to be easily infected, and thus become carriers of diseases, some of which may even be fatal. There is nothing at all surprising about all of these, for every unnecessary tampering with Allah’s creation is bound to produce adverse repercussions.

In Islam, all such acts that entail possible health hazards are considered totally forbidden even if they may contain some imagined or presumed benefits; such presumed benefits are considered as being outweighed by the hazards. This fact alone warrants declaring body piercing as forbidden.

The only exception some scholars and jurists have made in this context is the case of ear piercing specifically for females. This is so because of the specific need of women to wear jewelry. Men, however, according to Islam, have no such need. In fact, Islam forbids men from copying styles that are distinctively feminine. The Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) said, “Allah has cursed men who copy women as well as women who copy men.” It should be remembered here both men and women have different roles in Islam.

It is also worthy of mentioning in this respect that ear piercinsg is somewhat different; for there are fewer hazards in ear piercing as compared to piercing of tongues, lips and eye-lids, etc.

Still another consideration strengthening the case for declaring body piercing as forbidden for males: Islam forbids us from copying other people in their specific customs and life-style without any tangible benefits. Such copying has been condemned by the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him).

In conclusion: Body piercing for males is not at all permissible in Islam. Ear piercing has been permitted for females, according to some scholars. Such an exception, however, does not apply to males.